As you'll read in this Forerunner 620 review, standout features include
real-time heart rate monitoring, albeit with a separate chest strap, cadence
and vertical oscillation stats to help you strive for a record-breaking Mo
Farrah running style, and it’ll even offer advice on how long you need to
recover from the workout you’ve just done.

Add to that a great battery life and a responsive colour touchscreen and
you’re looking at one of the best running weapons you can put on your wrist.

Garmin
Forerunner 620: Features and design

Out of the box you'll spot that the Garmin Forerunner 620 is a
high-quality package – the circular watch face is a decent size for visibility,
but far from the enormous wrist-weights of yesteryear. The colour touchscreen
is responsive and easy to navigate even when you’re on the move.

It's lighter than its predecessor (the 610) by a considerable margin.
Included in the box is the heart rate monitoring chest strap – vital for
tracking that vertical oscillation – and a proprietary charger that's not
compatible with any of your older Garmin watch models.

While having a unique charging cable isn’t something only Garmin’s are
guilty of, it’s irritating having to remember to take this with you, especially
if you’re a commuter runner who might want to leave work with the Forerunner on
a full charge.

The Garmin Forerunner 620 has one of the most complete suites of tech on
the running watch market, packing in everything from Wi-Fi to ANT+ to Bluetooth
Smart, and this is used to deliver some neat tricks.

One particular piece of ingenious design is the fact that it will
automatically cache satellite locations so GPS acquisition is considerably
faster. In our tests we got a GPS signal within 30 seconds on almost every
outing. The cache is updated via Wi-Fi and Bluetooth Smart each time you
connect.

The Garmin Forerunner 620 is waterproof to 50 meters, but won’t track
your movements in the pool, sadly. Luckily, its performance on terra firma
more than makes up for it.

Garmin
Forerunner 620: Activity tracking

Unsurprisingly, the range of activity tracking that the Garmin
Forerunner 620 offers is immense. By default you’ll be tracking pace, distance,
time and heart rate, but these are all configurable, and like other high-end
training watches you can choose precisely which metrics you’d like on a series
of up to four screens or pages.

On the move a simple tap of the touchscreen skips between the screens. As
we mentioned, the GPS caching trick means locking onto satellites is usually a
matter of seconds rather than minutes, and accuracy is excellent.

The Garmin Forerunner 620 also introduces some new features: VO2Max
Check: to tell you the current state of recovery and Race Predictor, which will
tell you how quickly you could run your next race.

In addition, when you’re using the HRM-Run heart rate chest strap you’ll
get access to Running Dynamics metrics such as cadence (the rate at which your
feet strike the floor, 180 strikes per minute being somewhere near ideal),
vertical oscillation (the total vertical movement of your torso) and ground
contact time (the amount of time your feet spend on the tarmac or trail).

This is a previously unseen level of detail about your running style and
efficiency that might be a bit too much for a fun runner but offers extremely
useful insights for the serious runner on the search for perfect form.

You can also set up in-run alerts for everything from time, distance, pace,
heart rate, cadence and calories, while a run-walk alert feature allows you to
construct your own time-based intervals sessions.

The amount of post-run information presented back to you on the watch
itself is really impressive and puts the Garmin streets ahead of other watches like
the TomTom Cardio Runner.

Garmin
Forerunner 620: App and web tools

The app setup for the Garmin Forerunner 620 is pretty straightforward,
has the full power of Garmin's Connect platform behind it and comes with a
fresh, updated look for 2014.

Once you've paired the watch to a compatible iOS or Android device
running the free Garmin Connect Mobile app you can view mapping and basic stats
immediately, and also upload the data to your Garmin Connect profile. You can
also set up nominated Wi-Fi hot spots where the Garmin Forerunner 620 will
automatically sync with Garmin Connect when in range.

Garmin’s Connect is a powerful beast (Garmin’s pro cycle teams use a
slightly juiced-up version) and the social sharing functionality is strong
indeed and packs-in live tracking, which allows your friends and fans to follow
along and see your stats in real time. You’ll need to invite them personally
though, which is a nice privacy touch.

There is also a variety of free training plans to follow, and you can create a calendar of activity and have that synced with Outlook and Google
Calendar.

However, if Garmin’s software products don’t suit for any reason, the
Garmin Forerunner 620 outputs data files in the standard .FIT file format, so
you can take them and upload to almost any third party site. You’ll need to
connect the Garmin Forerunner 620 as a USB device and download the data
manually. This is easily done, as the device appears as a standard USB mass
storage device.

The Garmin Connect app is fully customisable, allowing you to add tiles
featuring information from your latest runs plus other Garmin devices like the Garmin
Vivoift and even MyFitnessPal for more insights into your diet and calorie
intake.

In truth, we found the run data on the app lacking a little bit of
depth. For brief analysis it’s solid but in order to review all those running
dynamics stats, you’ll need to hit the Garmin Connect website. Needing a
connection to review your data via the app is also frustrating.

Garmin
Forerunner 620 battery life

In testing we got a solid 10 hours activity tracking out of the Garmin
Forerunner 620, but it’ll run as a regular watch (with GPS disabled) for six
weeks. There’s also a very nifty autolock function that prevents the Garmin
Forerunner 620 slipping back into GPS mode and burning through the battery by
accident.

Garmin Forerunner 620

By Garmin

The Garmin Forerunner 620 is without doubt one of the most specialised running watches on the market, and offers a gigantic spec list. It’s so configurable that setup can be time-consuming, but once done it’s one of the best around. GPS is quick, accurate and the hardware rugged enough to deal with everyday life.

3 Comments

07-Apr-2016 3:24 pm

Fras says:

Hi,

I want to know is it possible to add a custom activities to the watch there are 3 activities on my watch namely, race, run and cycling. I want tro add like walking hiking and maybe squash because thats activities I do I can doe it afterword in carmin connect.